Child Labour Protest at G8 meeting, the ugly reality of globalization

AFP, 21 June 1997

DENVER, Colorado, June 21 (AFP) - An alliance of pro-children
activists, backed by the AFL-CIO labor union, on Saturday urged
world leaders gathered here to stand up to western corporations that
it said abuse workers and children abroad.

The groups released a letter to be sent to the Summit of the
Eight charging that "already, children are bearing the brunt of
economic globalization," working in horrific conditions for little
pay.

Others, it said, suffer from infectious diseases and stunted
prospects as "governments everywhere cut agriculture, education,
welfare, health, labor and evironmental programs ... in the scramble
to compete in the global market."

The letter asked the leaders of Britain, France, Canada,
Germany, Italy, Japan, Russia and the United States to end their
participation in trade agreements -- such as NAFTA -- that fail to
guarantee core labor rights.

It said government export credits and risk insurance should be
denied multinational corporations that do not meet "the highest
labor, environmental and human rights standards" in their operations
overseas.

"Corporations are doing abroad what they would never be able to
get away with in the United States and Europe," said Daniel
Seligman, a spokesman for the Sierra Club, a major US environmental
group and a signer of Saturday's letter.

He charged that corporations active in developing countries,
where they are unfettered by labor laws and other regulations, are
exploiting child workers, polluting land, sky and water and busting
unions.

The latter allegation may have prompted John Sweeney, president
of the AFL-CIO, to sign the statement.

Another signer, Ruth Caplan of the populist movement Alliance
for Democracy, argued that multinational companies and their local
agents should be compelled to pay livable wages to their workers in
the developing world.

"If you don't want to see children in sweatshops, you have to
ensure that their parents earn enough to feed their families."

Both Caplan and Seligman said they had taken heart at the recent
legislative election in France, where victory for the Socialists and
their allies was seen as evidence of public revulsion at the
pro-market, US-backed austerity measures pursued by the country's
right wing president, Jacques Chirac.

"The French are standing strong," Caplan declared, though she
said she feared the safety net established in Europe could be
"shredded" as governments throttle back on social programs in order
to engage the United States in global competition.

"The French people have shown real leadership in saying enough
is enough," added Seligman.